143 lines
9.8 KiB
Markdown
143 lines
9.8 KiB
Markdown
# DWH dbt
|
|
|
|
Welcome to Superhog's DWH dbt project. Here we model the entire DWH.
|
|
|
|
## How to set up your environment
|
|
|
|
### Basics
|
|
|
|
- Pre-requisites
|
|
- You need a Linux environment. That can be Linux, macOS or WSL.
|
|
- You need to have Python `>=3.10` installed.
|
|
- All docs will assume you are using VSCode.
|
|
- Also install the following VSCode Python extension: ms-python.python
|
|
- Prepare networking
|
|
- You must be able to reach the DWH server through the network. There are several ways to do this.
|
|
- The current recommended route is to use the data VPN. You can ask Pablo to help you set it up.
|
|
- Set up
|
|
- Create a virtual environment for the project with `python3 -m venv venv`.
|
|
- It's recommended that you set up the new `venv` as your default interpreter for VSCode. To do this, click Ctrl+Shift+P, and look for the `Python: Select interpreter` option. Choose the new `venv`.
|
|
- Activate the virtual environment and run `pip install -r requirements.txt`
|
|
- Create an entry for this project `profiles.yml` file at `~/.dbt/profiles.yml`. You have a suggested template at `profiles.yml.example`
|
|
- Make sure that the `profiles.yml` host and port settings are consistent with whatever networking approach you've taken.
|
|
- Run `chmod 600 ~/.dbt/profiles.yml` to secure your profiles file.
|
|
- Run `dbt deps` to install dbt dependencies
|
|
- Check
|
|
- Ensure you are running in the project venv.
|
|
- Run `dbt debug`. If it runs well, you are all set. If it fails, there's something wrong with your set up. Grab the terminal output and pull the thread.
|
|
- Complements
|
|
- If you are in VSCode, you most probably want to have this extension installed: [dbt Power User](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=innoverio.vscode-dbt-power-user)
|
|
- It is advised to use [this autoformatter](https://sqlfmt.com/) and to automatically [run it on save](https://docs.sqlfmt.com/integrations/vs-code). **Important**: if you have already installed dbt Power User, [follow the instructions of this link directly](https://docs.sqlfmt.com/integrations/dbt-power-user).
|
|
|
|
### Local DWH
|
|
|
|
Running a local version of the DWH allows you to test things as you develop: a must if you want to push changes to master without breaking everything.
|
|
|
|
You can read on how to set this up in `dev-env/local_dwh.md`.
|
|
|
|
## Branching strategy
|
|
|
|
This repo works in a trunk-based-development philosophy (<https://trunkbaseddevelopment.com/>).
|
|
|
|
If your branch is related to a work item from DevOps, we encourage adding the ticket number in the branch name. For example: `models/123-some-fancy-name`. If you don't have a ticket number, you can simply do a `NOTICKET` one: `models/NOTICKET-some-fancy-name`.
|
|
|
|
When working on Data modeling stuff (models, sources, seeds, docs, etc.) use a `models` branch (i.e. `models/782-churned-users`). It's fine and encouraged to build incrementally towards a `reporting` level table with multiple PRs as long as you keep the model buildable along the way.
|
|
|
|
For other matters, use a `chores` branch (i.e. `chores/656-add-dbt-package`).
|
|
|
|
## Project organization
|
|
|
|
We organize models in three folders:
|
|
|
|
- `staging`
|
|
- Pretty much this: <https://docs.getdbt.com/best-practices/how-we-structure/2-staging>
|
|
- One `.yml` per `sync` schema, with naming `_<sourcename>_sources.yml`. For example, for Core, `_core_sources.yml`.
|
|
- All models go prefixed with `stg_`.
|
|
- Avoid `SELECT *`. We don't know what dirty stuff can come from the `sync` schemas.
|
|
- `intermediate`
|
|
- Pretty much this: <https://docs.getdbt.com/best-practices/how-we-structure/3-intermediate>
|
|
- It's strictly forbidden to use tables here to serve end users.
|
|
- Make an effort to practice DRY.
|
|
- `reporting`
|
|
- Pretty much this: <https://docs.getdbt.com/best-practices/how-we-structure/4-marts>
|
|
- For now, we follow a monolithic approach and just have one `reporting` schema. When this becomes insufficient, we will judge splitting into several schemas.
|
|
- Make an effort to keep this layer stable like you would do with a library's API so that downstream dependencies don't break without control.
|
|
|
|
## Conventions
|
|
|
|
- dbt practices:
|
|
- Always use CTEs in your models to `source` and `ref` other models.
|
|
- Columns and naming
|
|
- We follow [snake case](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snake_case) for column names and table names.
|
|
- Identifier columns should begin with `id_`, not finish with `_id`.
|
|
- Use binary question-like column names for binary, bool, and flag columns (i.e. not `active` but `is_active`, not `verified` but `has_been_verified`, not `imported` but `was_imported`)
|
|
- Datetime columns should either finish in `_utc` or `_local`. If they finish in local, the table should contain a `local_timezone` column that contains the [timezone identifier](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones).
|
|
- We work with many currencies and lack a single main once. Hence, any money fields will be ambiguous on their own. To address this, any table that has money related columns should also have a column named `currency`. We currently have no policy for tables where a single record has columns in different currencies. If you face this, assemble the data team and decide on something.
|
|
- Folder structures and naming
|
|
- All models live in models, and either in staging, intermediate or reporting.
|
|
- Staging models should be prepended with `stg_` and intermediate with `int_`.
|
|
- Split schema and domain with double underscode (ie `stg_core__booking`).
|
|
- Always use sources to read into staging models.
|
|
- SQL formatting should be done with `sqlfmt`.
|
|
- YAML files:
|
|
- Should use the `.yml` extension, not `.yaml`.
|
|
- Should be autoformatted on save. If you install [this vscode extension](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=redhat.vscode-yaml), autoformatting should happen out of the box thanks to the settings included in the `.vscode/settings.json` file.
|
|
- Other conventions
|
|
- In staging, enforce a `lower()` to user UUID fields to avoid nasty propagations in the DWH.
|
|
|
|
When in doubt, do what dbt guys would do: <https://docs.getdbt.com/best-practices>
|
|
Or Gitlab: <https://handbook.gitlab.com/handbook/business-technology/data-team/platform/dbt-guide/>
|
|
|
|
## Testing Standards
|
|
|
|
- All tables need Primary Key and Null tests.
|
|
- Tables in staging and reporting should have more thorough testing. What to look for is up to you, but it should provide strong confidence in the quality of data.
|
|
- Tests will be ran after every `dbt run`.
|
|
|
|
## How to schedule
|
|
|
|
We currently use a minimal setup where we run the project from a VM within our infra with a simple cron job. These instructions are fit for Azure VMs running Ubuntu 22.04, you might need to change details if you are running somewhere else.
|
|
|
|
To deploy:
|
|
|
|
- Prepare a VM with Ubuntu 22.04
|
|
- You need to have Python `>=3.10` installed.
|
|
- You must be able to reach the DWH server through the network.
|
|
- On the VM, set up git creds for the project (for example, with an ssh key) and clone the git project in the `azureuser` home dir. And checkout main.
|
|
- Create a virtual environment for the project with `python3 -m venv venv`.
|
|
- Activate the virtual environment and run `pip install -r requirements.txt`
|
|
- Also run `dbt deps` to install the dbt packages required by the project.
|
|
- Create an entry for this project `profiles.yml` file at `~/.dbt/profiles.yml`. You have a suggested template at `profiles.yml.example`. Make sure that the `profiles.yml` host and port settings are consistent with whatever networking approach you've taken.
|
|
- There are three scripts in the root of this project called `run_dbt.sh`, `run_tests.sh` and `run_docs.sh`. Place them in the running user's home folder. Adjust the paths of the script if you want/need to.
|
|
- `run_dbt.sh` and `run_tests.sh` don't take any CLI arguments. `run_docs.sh` takes one: the folder where you would like the docs to be placed. So, if you want docs at `/some/path/for/docs/`, you would call the script like this: `/bin/bash run_docs.sh /some/path/for/docs/`.
|
|
- The scripts are designed to send both success and failure messages to slack channels upon completion. To properly set this up, you will need to place a file called `slack_webhook_urls.txt` on the same path you put the script files. The slack webhooks file should have two lines: `SLACK_ALERT_WEBHOOK_URL=<url-of-webhook-for-failures>` and `SLACK_RECEIPT_WEBHOOK_URL=<url-of-webhook-for-successful-runs>`. Setting up the slack channels and webhooks is outside of the scope of this readme.
|
|
- Create a cron entry with `crontab -e` that runs the scripts. For example, you can use the following line to sequentially build the documentation, run the models and then test the DWH, making each step only happen if the previous one succeds:
|
|
|
|
```bash
|
|
# This goes in your crontab file
|
|
15 6 * * * /bin/bash /home/azureuser/run_docs.sh /home/azureuser/dbtdocs && /bin/bash /home/azureuser/run_dbt.sh && /bin/bash /home/azureuser/run_tests.sh
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
To monitor:
|
|
|
|
- The model building script writes output to a `dbt_run.log` file. You can check the contents to see what happened in the past runs. The exact location of the log file depends on how you set up the `run_dbt.sh` script. If you are unsure of where your logs are being written, check the script to find out.
|
|
- Same applies to the test script, except it will write into a separate `dbt_test.log`.
|
|
- And the docs script will write in `dbt_docs.log`.
|
|
|
|
To maintain:
|
|
|
|
- Remember to update dbt package dependencies when including new packages.
|
|
|
|
## Serving the docs with a web server
|
|
|
|
Once you build the docs with `run_docs.sh`, you will have a bunch of files. To open them up, you will need to serve them with a webserver like Caddy or Nginx.
|
|
|
|
This goes beyond the scope of this project: to understand how you can serve these, refer to our [infra script repo](https://guardhog.visualstudio.com/Data/_git/data-infra-script). Specifically, the bits around the web gateway set up.
|
|
|
|
## CI
|
|
|
|
TBD.
|
|
|
|
## Stuff that we haven't done but we would like to
|
|
|
|
- Automate formatting with git pre-commit.
|